Nate Anderson shocked Wall Street in mid-January by announcing the closure of Hindenburg Research, the tiny short-selling firm he founded that knocked billions of dollars off the valuations of big ...
U.S. short-seller Hindenburg Research has said it is not under investigation by the U.S. SEC as it rubbished alleged links of its founder to a hedge fund for preparing reports targeting companies.
Hindenburg Research, known for targeting Adani Group in 2023 and causing a $140 billion loss in market value, is winding down. Despite facing backlash and stirring controversy, it uncovered ...
Nate Anderson, the founder of Hindenburg Research, recently announced the closure of his nearly eight-year-old activist short-selling firm. However, the company, which gained global attention in ...
Hindenburg Research, the muckraking research and investment firm known for betting against companies including India’s Adani Group, will shut down, its founder has announced. Nate Anderson, who ...
New York CNN — For the last half-decade or so, the last thing any CEO wanted to wake up to was their company’s name in print alongside the name Hindenburg Research. If the short-seller had you ...
Nate Anderson, 'activist' short-seller who has announced shutting down of his almost eight years old research firm Hindenburg, is under cloud for alleged links with hedge funds in preparing ...
Lawyer Jai Anant Dehadrai launched an attack on Hindenburg Research chief Nate Anderson after reports said the US short seller is under scrutiny for securities fraud. In documents filed at the ...
In a move that has taken the markets by shock, Hindenburg Research, a US-based short seller, announced that the company is shutting down earlier this morning. The announcement has sparked a wave ...
Activist short-seller firm Hindenburg Research is calling it quits after an impactful eight-year run in which its reports took on high-profile investors like Carl Icahn and Gautam Adani and helped ...
The market has a structural deficit of scepticism. And businesses like Hindenburg find that investors won’t pay for an industry that fills gaps where regulators themselves should be more active.